islamic cairo
3-6 May 1999
 
Ibn Tulun Mosque, Cairo's oldest surviving mosque,
and the Mosque of Muhammad Ali.
Islam was introduced into Egypt by Amr ibn
el-As in 639 AD and Egypt changed forever since then. Islam is based on
the recitations of the Prophet Muhammad who was born in 570 AD in Mecca,
Arabia. At the age of 40 he received the word of God through Gabriel, the
archangel and for 22 years thereafter, he recited his revelations to his
followers. Islam rests on the Quran (el-Quran means the recitation). In
the quest of spreading this message, the converted Arab armies led by his
followers in Baghdad, conquered the Byzantine and Persian empires.
If there is time to see only one mosque
in Cairo, it has to be the Ibn Tulun Mosque. Built in the 9th Century by
Ahmed ibn Tulun, it is the oldest surviving mosque in Cairo. The mosque is
impressive both for its large scale and extremely simplistic classical
lines. The vast courtyard is covered with pebbles, the pointed arches made
of brickwork and stucco, and the spiral minaret seems to have been
borrowed out of a fairytale. A 2-kilometer long wooden frieze inscribed by
one-fifteenth of the Quran runs below the ceiling.
Cairo knew its moments of greatest wealth
and splendour in medieval times. The Fatimid rulers from today’s Tunisia
invaded Egypt around the 10th Century and laid the ground plan for their
capital city el-Qahira, the triumphant, namely Cairo. The Fatimid
empire contained great wealth. They built fantastic palaces throughout
Egypt as well as Islam’s first university-mosque, el-Azhar meaning the
‘most blooming’. Claimed to be the oldest existing university in the
world, it is the leading center for Islamic theology in the Arab world.
Over 25,000 students from all over the Muslim world currently study here.
Fatimid rule ended without a fight in the
12th Century giving way to Syrian troops led by a young Kurd called Salah
ad-Din who is famed for his jihad, holy war, and in bringing Egypt
back under the religious authority of Baghdad. Salah ad-Din turned his
back on the palaces and built himself a large fortified citadel atop the
hill with limestone blocks from the Giza pyramids. Not much of the
original buildings remain as they were torn down by subsequent rulers to
make way for their own mosques and palaces.
Much of present day Cairo’s appearance
was shaped during the period of the Mamluks (13th-16th Century).
Mostly Turkish slaves, they were brought into Egypt, converted to Islam,
taught how to fight and then given their freedom. Though their lives were
filled with violence, their monuments displayed taste and talent. The
Sultan Hasan Mosque-Madrasa, built by Sultan Hasan (14th Century) is still
one of the world’s largest mosques. Covering an area of approximately
8,000 sq. meters, the complex includes a mosque, tomb, madrasa (theology colleges for the four Quranic schools as well as apartments for
the students), a well and a market.
The Mamluks were followed by the Ottoman Turks from Central Asia
who ruled
Egypt from the 16th to 18th Century through a governor based in Istanbul.
The Ottomans had little interest in Egypt. All that mattered was that
Egypt should not revolt and pay its taxes regularly. Next to Ibn Tulun’s
Mosque is the Gayer-Anderson House, a fine example of an Ottoman house.
Part of the Islamic Art Museum, the house consists of two houses joined by
a passageway. An Englishman, Dr. Gayer Anderson, doctor to the royal
family lived here in the early 20th Century and restored and decorated it
with its current furnishings.
In 1805, the people of Cairo finally
insisted that Muhammad Ali be made their ruler, bringing direct rule back
to Egypt after three centuries. Muhammad Ali founded a dynasty that lasted till the
revolution in 1952. The Mosque of Muhammad Ali stands adjacent to Salah
ad-Din’s Citadel. Modeled on the same lines as the Blue Mosque of
Istanbul, its minarets tower high over Cairo’s skyline. Its enormous dome
is supported by four semi-domes. The decor within is Baroque, rich and
highly decorative; the massive rings of lights and the exquisitely painted
domes creating a vision of space and beauty. Muhammad Ali is buried under a
marble cenotaph inside the great hall.
No trip to Cairo can however be complete
without a visit to Khan el-Khalili, Cairo’s
most exciting bazaar dating back to the 13th Century with its narrow
alleys crammed with antiques, jewellery, gold, silver, leatherwork,
carpets, perfumes and spices. To buy or not to buy. Just never say no to a
bottle of magical, mystical Egyptian perfume - Queen of the Desert, Lotus
of the Nile - and a hand-painted papyrus illustrating scenes from ancient
Egypt.
The sun sets and darkness falls. The Nile
River shimmers and pulsates in the dark, lights aglow everywhere, smiling
radiant faces, voices, traffic, laughter, little boats with neon lights
scurrying down the river, the minarets ablaze with a halo. Its time to
leave, but before you go come take a ride on a horse carriage under the
moon and be part of Cairo’s 5,000 year old soul.
|
|